Other Mollo sites, such as Piniqo and Khargi, exhibit the same settlement characteristics as Iskanwaya,[5]Wamán is an old agricultural establishment with the same terracing pattern.[6] The present-day village of Charazani includes Mollo archaeological sites as the ruins of Mallku Janalaya.[7]
Ethnography
Kallawaya people, an itinerant group of healers, were of the Mollo culture.
The Mollo were defined by their ceramics. Shoe pots, grave pots, vases, and dipping vessels have been found and these are either plain or painted black and white on red clay. They created a unique drinking cup with a built-in straw.[citation needed] Some of these ceramics can be found today as far away as the Náprstek Museum in Prague.[8]
Burials were of single adults placed in chullpa funerary towers of stone or adobe, while infant skeletons are found in tombs beneath house floors.